The reviews are sorted alphabetically by authors' last name -- one or more pages for each letter (plus one for Mc).
All but some recent reviews are listed here. Links to those reviews appear on the
Recent Feature Review Page.

Uncle Bones by Damien Broderickreviewed by Rich Horton
This is a collection of four novellas, one from both the beginning of his
career and another from 2009 plus two from the early 80s which was a particularly productive period for Broderick.
The title story is arguably a Young Adult story and is also a zombie story along with being
pure Science Fiction: not at all the tiresome cliché
zombie stuff we see altogether too much of these days.

K-Machines by Damien Broderickreviewed by Greg L. JohnsonK-Machines starts off in much the same style as its prequel, mixing enigmatic conversation with literary stylings and rampaging
monsters. It's when August Seebeck, whose life changed so dramatically in Godplayers, begins questioning what has happened to him
that K-Machines starts to change its focus. The adventure is still there, but it now moves more to the background, and the main
story becomes a series of conversations all brought about by August's questions.

K-Machines by Damien Broderickreviewed by Rich Horton
Sequel to Godplayers, this novel continues the story of August Seebeck, an ordinary Australian man who is
suddenly brought to realize that he is part of a family, all named after the months, August has been told that he and his family
are "Players in the Contest of Worlds," battling foes known as the "Deformers" for -- for what?

Godplayers by Damien Broderickreviewed by Rich Horton
The novel follows a young man from Australia named August Seebeck. His parents disappeared, presumed dead,
when he was a boy, and he was raised by relatives, in particular his Aunt Miriam and later his Great-Aunt Tansy. He comes home
to Tansy's house after herding cattle in the outback, to find that she claims dead bodies have been showing up in her bathtub.

Transcension by Damien Broderickreviewed by Lisa DuMond
Living in the 22nd century, Amanda Kolby-McAllister at almost 30 years old may be an accomplished violinist
and a brilliant mathematician, but she is still only a pender. Until the age of 30, she is only pending
majority status, kept in an artificial state of adolescence and treated like the youngster she is.
After all, if humans have the potential to live forever, what is 30 but the first steps of childhood.

The White Abacus by Damien Broderickreviewed by Jean-Louis Trudel
The novel has style... but the story is less than compelling.
The least successful parts were those patterned on the well-known plot of Hamlet.
When the novel dealt with its own universe or twists on the classic premise, it felt
fresher and the sheer scope of the author's future vision was exhilarating.